Sally Wiggin finds Pittsburgh flavor at Giordano Bros., a Steelers bar that serves Primanti-style sandwiches. It was founded by Jeff Jordan and his wife Allison. They even have a Fox Chapel native behind the bar.

Clay Travis opens the blog post by acknowledging that "Steelers fans are everywhere" -- but he credits that to Pittsburgh's massive population loss over the years, as residents left to find jobs in other cities.

The blogger describes Steeler Nation as "a collection of people who didn't want to be homeless and decided to move to your city instead of staying in Pittsburgh and freezing to death."

Then, he gets down to business with a section called "So what's the dumbest stereotypical Steeler fan like in his element."

"He's sitting at your neighborhood Applebee's bar in a Troy Polamalu jersey," Travis writes. "No matter which American city you live in, come Sunday there are Steeler fans at your bar. That's why everyone hates Steeler fans, because they're the guys and gals who move to a city that's much better than their own and cheer for another team's city. Every NFL fan base hates Steeler fans. They're the absolute worst. This is a scientific fact."

And this: "He has a faded Steeler nation bumper sticker on his 1992 Toyota Celica that hasn't been running since 1998. His weekend wardrobe is made up of 10 different Steeler jerseys and cargo shorts with hightop black sneakers. He's got a protruding beer gut but you can't see it because his oversized jersey makes him look like a potato sack with arms and legs."

The Steelers fan base is No. 6 on Travis' countdown, just behind Notre Dame fans at No. 5 and ahead of the Oakland Raiders (7), the West Virginia Mountaineers (8), the Dallas Cowboys (9) and the Tennessee Volunteers (10).